What it measures

A browser-based measurement tool for experts

Web Apps

Anything you can view in a Chrome browser can be measured e.g. prototypes, websites, or enterprise applications.

Mobile Apps

By using a mirroring application and capturing screens we can measure and evaluate mobile experiences.

Non-Digital

And, coming soon we're working to offer ability to be able to measure real world in-person experiences from your phone. It's still possible, but its more of a work around.

How it works

Below is more elaboration on some key features to demonstrate measuring experiences.

01:16

A brief overview of measuring experiences

01:21

Setting a scale and "rules of thumb"

01:18

Recommended guidelines to performing an evaluation

01:08

The process of creating a report

02:46

Exporting and stylizing your report

About

how did we get here again....

2015-2016

Ideation

We productized our own process to perform UX evalutation to make it faster and more collaborative improve the process for UX designers. Well, here it is. Our back of the napkin estimate clocks it in at 50-70% more efficient.

August 2016

Testing and development

After reviewing with peers in and outside of our network we concept tested the process with companies. Continually we are making incremental changes to improve it and on a shoestring budget. We broke ground and began building it.

2017

Refinement

We're broadening the appeal by extending the application beyond ux design to a broader audiences. as well as, fix some things that were just not working.

March 2017

Google Play Store

The product will be available soon to use and evaluate for free, and there will be priced equitably for interested customers to use.